57 research outputs found
Large prebiotic molecules in space: photo-physics of acetic acid and its isomers
An increasing number of large molecules have been positively identified in
space. Many of these molecules are of biological interest and thus provide
insight into prebiotic organic chemistry in the protoplanetary nebula. Among
these molecules, acetic acid is of particular importance due to its structural
proximity to glycine, the simplest amino acid. We compute electronic and
vibrational properties of acetic acid and its isomers, methyl formate and
glycolaldehyde, using density functional theory. From computed photo-absorption
cross-sections, we obtain the corresponding photo-absorption rates for solar
radiation at 1 AU and find them in good agreement with previous estimates. We
also discuss glycolaldehyde diffuse emission in Sgr B2(N), as opposite to
emissions from methyl formate and acetic acid that appear to be concentrate in
the compact region Sgr B2(N-LMH).Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Photo-evaporation of close-in gas giants orbiting around G and M stars
X-rays and extreme ultraviolet radiation impacting on a gas produce a variety
of effects that, depending on the electron content, may provide a significant
heating of the illuminated region. In a planetary atmosphere of solar
composition, stellar high energy radiation may heat the gas to very high
temperatures, that may have consequences on the stability of planetary
atmospheres, in particular for close-in planets.
We investigate the variations with stellar age in the occurring frequency of
gas giant planets orbiting G and M stars, taking into account that the high
energy luminosity of a low mass star evolves in time, both in intensity and
hardness.
Using the energy-limited escape approach we investigate the effects induced
by the atmospheric mass loss on giant exoplanet distribution that is initially
flat, at several distances from the parent star. We follow the dynamical
evolution of the planet atmosphere, tracking the departures from the initial
profile due to the atmospheric escape, until it reaches the final mass-radius
configuration.
We find that a significant fraction of low mass Jupiter-like planets orbiting
with periods lower than ~3.5 days either vaporize during the first billion
years, or lose a relevant part of their atmospheres. The planetary initial mass
profile is significantly distorted; in particular, the frequency of occurrence
of gas giants, less massive than 2 MJ, around young star can be considerably
greater than the one around older stellar counterparts
Modelling dust extinction in the Magellanic Clouds
We model the extinction profiles observed in the Small and Large Magellanic
clouds with a synthetic population of dust grains consisting by core-mantle
particles and a collection of free-flying polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. All
different flavors of the extinction curves observed in the Magellanic Clouds
can be described by the present model, that has been previously (successfully)
applied to a large sample of diffuse and translucent lines of sight in the
Milky Way. We find that in the Magellanic Clouds the extinction produced by
classic grains is generally larger than absorption by polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons. Within this model, the non-linear far-UV rise is accounted for by
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, whose presence in turn is always associated
to a gap in the size distribution of classical particles. This hints either a
physical connection between (e.g., a common cause for) polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons and the absence of middle-sized dust particles, or the need for an
additional component in the model, that can account for the non-linear far-UV
rise without contributing to the UV bump at 217 nm, e.g., nanodiamonds
Modelling extragalactic extinction through gamma-ray burst afterglows
We analyze extragalactic extinction profiles derived through gamma-ray burst
afterglows, using a dust model specifically constructed on the assumption that
dust grains are not immutable but respond time-dependently to the local
physics. Such a model includes core-mantle spherical particles of mixed
chemical composition (silicate core, sp2 and sp3 carbonaceous layers), and an
additional molecular component, in the form of free-flying polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons. We fit most of the observed extinction profiles. Failures occur
for lines of sight presenting remarkable rises blueward the bump. We find a
tendency in the carbon chemical structure to become more aliphatic with the
galactic activity, and to some extent with increasing redshifts. Moreover, the
contribution of the moleclar component to the total extinction is more
important in younger objects. The results of the fitting procedure (either
successes and failures) may be naturally interpreted through an evolutionary
prescription based on the carbon cycle in the interstellar medium of galaxies
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C2absorption-line diagnostics of diffuse interstellar clouds
The excitation of the diatomic carbon molecule in diffuse interstellar clouds is discussed for a cloud with large density fluctuations of small linear filling factor along the line of sight. Possible implications for the chemistry of the diffuse cloud in front of Cygnus OB2 No. 12 are discussed.Physic
EXCITATION OF C2 IN DIFFUSE INTERSTELLAR CLOUDS
We investigate the effects and the implications of incorporating new collision and radiative rates in modeling the excitation of diatomic carbon molecule. The present results suggest that diffuse and translucent interstellar clouds may present a structure in which regions with different densities and kinetic temperatures overlap along the line of sight, such as core-halo clouds, the nested structure of the molecular gas, and clumpiness. Such conclusion reflects the response of the C{sub 2} rotational ladder to the interplay of thermal and radiative conditions, with low and high rotational levels tracing different regions of the parameter space. To relieve constraints to the formation and excitation of C{sub 2} molecules, we propose a scenario in which the chemistry in diffuse clouds is supplemented by chemistry in many transient and tiny perturbations
EXTRAGALACTIC INTERSTELLAR EXTINCTION CURVES: INDICATORS OF LOCAL PHYSICAL CONDITIONS
Normalized interstellar extinction curves (ISECs) in the Milky Way and other galaxies show a variety of shapes. This variety is attributed to differences along different sight lines in the abundances of the several dust and gas components contributing to extinction. In this paper we propose that these abundance differences are not arbitrary but are a specific consequence of the physical conditions on those sight lines. If this proposal is correct, then it implies that ISECs contain information about physical conditions in the regions generating extinction. This may be particularly important for high redshift galaxies where information on the conditions may be difficult to obtain. We adopt a model of extinction carriers in which the solid and gaseous components are not immutable but respond time-dependently to the local physics. We validate this model by fitting extinction curves measured on sight lines in the Magellanic Clouds and obtained for the gamma-ray burst afterglow GRB 080605. We present results for this model as follows: (1) we show that computed ISECs are controlled by a small number of physical parameters, (2) we demonstrate the sensitivity of computed ISECs to these parameters, (3) we compute as examples ISECs for particular galaxy types, and (4) we note that different galaxy types have different shapes of ISEC
Observational Evidence of Dust Evolution in Galactic Extinction Curves
Although structural and optical properties of hydrogenated amorphous carbons are known to respond to varying physical conditions, most conventional extinction models are basically curve fits with modest predictive power. We compare an evolutionary model of the physical properties of carbonaceous grain mantles with their determination by homogeneously fitting observationally derived Galactic extinction curves with the same physically well-defined dust model. We find that a large sample of observed Galactic extinction curves are compatible with the evolutionary scenario underlying such a model, requiring physical conditions fully consistent with standard density, temperature, radiation field intensity, and average age of diffuse interstellar clouds. Hence, through the study of interstellar extinction we may, in principle, understand the evolutionary history of the diffuse interstellar clouds
Modeling Galactic Extinction with Dust and "Real" Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons
We investigate the remarkable apparent variety of galactic extinction curves by modeling extinction profiles with core-mantle grains and a collection of single polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Our aim is to translate a synthetic description of dust into physically well-grounded building blocks through the analysis of a statistically relevant sample of different extinction curves. All different flavors of observed extinction curves, ranging from the average galactic extinction curve to virtually 'bumpless' profiles, can be described by the present model. We prove that a mixture of a relatively small number (54 species in 4 charge states each) of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons can reproduce the features of the extinction curve in the ultraviolet, dismissing an old objection to the contribution of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons to the interstellar extinction curve. Despite the large number of free parameters (at most the 54 Multiplication-Sign 4 column densities of each species in each ionization state included in the molecular ensemble plus the 9 parameters defining the physical properties of classical particles), we can strongly constrain some physically relevant properties such as the total number of C atoms in all species and the mean charge of the mixture. Such properties are found to be largely independent of the adoptedmore » dust model whose variation provides effects that are orthogonal to those brought about by the molecular component. Finally, the fitting procedure, together with some physical sense, suggests (but does not require) the presence of an additional component of chemically different very small carbonaceous grains.« les
Signatures of X-ray dominated chemistry in the spectra of exoplanetary atmospheres
High-energy radiation from stars impacts planetary atmospheres deeply
affecting their chemistry, providing departures from chemical equilibrium.
While the upper atmospheric layers are dominated by ionizations induced by
extreme ultraviolet radiation, deeper into the atmosphere molecular abundances
are controlled by a characteristic X-ray dominated chemistry, mainly driven by
an energetic secondary electron cascade. In this work, we aim at identifying
molecular photochemically induced fingerprints in the transmission spectra of a
giant planet atmosphere. We have developed a numerical code capable of
synthesizing transmission spectra with arbitrary spectral resolution,
exploiting updated infrared photoabsorption cross sections. Chemical mixing
ratios are computed using a photochemical model, tailored to investigate high
energy ionization processes. We find that in case of high levels of stellar
activity, synthetic spectra in both low and high resolutions show significant,
potentially observable out-of-equilibrium signatures arising mainly from CO,
CH, CH, and HCN.Comment: The paper has been accepted for publication in The Planetary Science
Journal (PSJ
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